Compare Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Breadcrumbs Interactive. Published by Versus Evil. Released on 1/12/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie, RPG.

Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC)
ActionIndieRPG

Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC)

Add-on / DLC for Yaga — view full game
Jan 12, 2021Breadcrumbs InteractiveVersus Evil
PC
Best Price Available
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Screenshots & Media

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About Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC)

I keep coming back to Yaga the way you return to a short story you half-remember: there is real craft buried in it, and the moments where everything clicks feel genuinely uncommon in the indie action-RPG space. Romanian studio Breadcrumbs Interactive built something that plays less like a video game and more like a participatory fable, and the framing device alone is worth paying attention to. The whole adventure is narrated by Baba Yaga herself, recounting Ivan's exploits to a trio of crones - the Weaver, the Reader, and the Spinner - who bicker over how the story should go and hand Ivan buffs accordingly. It is a clever conceit that gives even the most mundane fetch quest a sense of theatrical weight. Ivan is a one-handed blacksmith cursed by the creature Likho, dispatched on suicidal errands by a paranoid Tzar, and quietly nagged by his babushka to please find a wife already. The tonal mix of dark mythology and domestic comedy works far better than it has any right to. Dialogue is written entirely in rhyme, and the voice acting carries it with enough dry wit that the occasional forced couplet becomes endearing rather than grating. Your choices in conversation shape Ivan's reputation, and villagers respond to who you have been - righteous, greedy, or boastful - which in turn unlocks different quest outcomes, trading options, and blessings. The branching is genuinely meaningful: a single playthrough runs around seven to eight hours, but the outcomes shift enough across replays to make a second run feel like a different chapter of the same tale. The forging system deserves a proper look before you dismiss it. Ivan crafts at anvils scattered across procedurally generated zones - five distinct biomes covering farmlands, swamps, forests, and snow-capped mountains - combining ore and enemy drops to make hammers with wildly different properties. The throwing mechanic, where the hammer boomerangs back like a stripped-down version of Thor's toolkit, is satisfying. Teleporting lightning hammers and hookshot pitchforks are real things you can build here. The problem is the bad luck meter. Actions as mundane as accepting a blessing or eating bread will spike it, and once it climbs high enough the demon Likho appears to smash your carefully forged weapon on the spot. In theory this is a risk-reward system. In practice, the best strategy most players land on is to avoid blessings entirely and stick with base weapons, which makes the entire forging loop feel like a trap rather than a playground. It is the game's most discussed flaw for a reason. What does not disappoint is the presentation. The hand-drawn art style pairs grotesque character designs with genuinely gorgeous outdoor environments - contrasting colours that make swamps and mountain passes feel like pages torn from an illustrated manuscript. The soundtrack by Bucharest underground band Subcarpati blends Romanian folk instruments with hip-hop production in a way that feels absurdly right for the mood, shifting tempo between combat and exploration without ever becoming background noise. All characters are fully voice-acted, which is a meaningful commitment for a small indie studio, and it pays off in the texture it adds to even minor NPCs. Steam's community sits at 81% positive across several hundred reviews, and the praise is consistently aimed at atmosphere, writing, and music while the criticism lands squarely on the combat loop and luck mechanics - a split that should help you decide whether this is your game. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

tier:inline-dlcinherits-from:cd2990f3-3f7a-4fba-921b-b7ad58d88698

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7, 8, 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 8800 GTX, GT640, GT730, Radeon HD 5850, HD Graphics 530
Processor
Intel CPU Core i3-2500K 2.0GHz+ / AMD CPU Phenom II 570
Sound Card
Stereo

Recommended

OS
Windows 7, 8, 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 8800 GTX, GT640, GT730, Radeon HD 5850, HD Graphics 530
Processor
Intel CPU Core i3-2500K 2.0GHz+ / AMD CPU Phenom II 570
Sound Card
Stereo

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Game Info

Developer
Breadcrumbs Interactive
Publisher
Versus Evil
Release Date
Jan 12, 2021

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Frequently asked questions about Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC)

Where can I buy Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) cheapest?

Compare Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) available on?

Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) is available on PC.

When was Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) released?

Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) was released on 12 January 2021.

Who developed Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC)?

Yaga - Roots of Evil (DLC) was developed by Breadcrumbs Interactive and published by Versus Evil.